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To help overcome the challenges of getting products to market, informal traders or “ground buyers” act as middlemen between growers and processors. Farmers explained that when these buyers arrive in their communities, local people, including children, steal ripe coffee cherries from their plots to sell for cash, which has led to increased violence. Farmers oppose the presence of these buyers in their communities, and they emphasized the need for stricter theft laws.

Theft

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As we traveled along the bumpy, narrow roads that connect farming communities to the main Highlands highway, it became evident why transportation poses such a significant challenge. Focus group participants told us that poor road conditions make it difficult for trucks to enter their community. To overcome this challenge, farmers hire laborers to carry large bags of coffee parchment to the main road. There, they wait for hours for public motor vehicles—privately owned vehicles that operate as taxi services—to transport the coffee to the main market. Farmers must pay for the laborers’ fare and an additional fee for each bag of coffee transported to the market.

High transportation and freight costs

4

Lack of processing and storage equipment

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Coffee berry borer (CBB), a pest that significantly reduces yields, is spreading across PNG’s coffee-producing areas. CBB is currently more prevalent in warmer, low-elevation areas near highways or towns than in communities at higher altitudes. 

Coffee berry borer

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Most farmers reported that low or volatile farmgate prices for coffee are a major challenge. Growers expressed concern about earning a standard price by weight, regardless of quality. This led some farmers to shift from producing coffee to growing sweet potato and high-value vegetable crops, which yield two to three harvests per year. 

Farmgate prices

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Engaging with Coffee Growers to Understand Production Challenges in Papua New Guinea's Highlands

Pathway
to Brewing Success

Rishabh Mukerjee, Harry Gimiseve, Wendy Safi, Emily Schmidt, Helmtrude Sikas-Iha, and Damaris Warambukia

Through discussions with men and women farmers, we learned about their perspectives on coffee production, including input use, pest control, weather shocks, labor, market access, and sales volume.

The IFPRI-CSCM team worked together to select coffee communities, contact village chiefs, prepare interview guides, and conduct interactive focus group discussions. We visited 12 communities from the following areas: 

Opportunities and next steps

Acknowledgments

Updating coffee yield estimations

Challenges faced by coffee growers

Coffee production practices vary among communities

Coffee is one of the most important smallholder cash crops in Papua New Guinea (PNG). Despite coffee’s economic importance, growers face production challenges and, on average, still struggle to meet household needs.

During the focus group discussions, most women farmers reported that not having a coffee pulper is a significant constraint to profitable production. To borrow a coffee pulper and process their coffee cherries, households without this essential tool must make an in-kind payment of 5–10 kgs of parchment (partially processed coffee beans), the equivalent of 20–40 Papua New Guinea Kina.1 Similarly, growers who do not own a canvas to dry their coffee harvest must make cash or in-kind payments to borrow one.